It was known as glasnost
It has been used in Russian to mean "openness and transparency. this policy, aided by perestroika which means restructuring,
<span>
introduced a series of reforms designed to give new freedoms to the
people, including greater freedom of speech. The press also became far
less controlled, and thousands of political prisoners and many
dissidents were released.</span>
The Oregon trail. farmers traveled by wagon is search of fertile land.
Answer:
FOUND an answer that might help you
(this actually works btw)
https://brainly.lat/tarea/28284513#:~:text=Respuesta%3A%20Porque%20fue%20la%20primera,gases%20t%C3%B3xicos%20y%20agentes%20qu%C3%ADmicos.
Explanation:
but I'll just type what they said
USername: kh4364582
Answer:
"Because it was the first war that featured innovative technological advances. Thanks to mechanized weapons, the powers were able to perfect and design weapons of great destructive capacity. One of the innovations was weapons made with toxic gases and chemical agents. There was also a modernization in the artillery and transport systems, for the first time they used airplanes. This genre that the war was even more crude than others, since there are new weapons that can be too lethal, so the casualties must have been many."
This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Phileas Fogg is a name synonymous with world adventure! Which statement below is false for the real-life inspiration behind this memorable character?
He was one of the first Americans to travel through the interior of Japan.
He traveled by train from Cleveland to San Francisco
He was born in Exeter, on the river Exe
He visited Baghdad
Answer: He was born in Exeter, on the river Exe
Explanation:
Phileas Fogg was the main character of the novel Around the World in Eighty Days (1872), by Jules Verne. This character was based on William Perry Fogg, a widely known American adventurer. William was born in Exeter, a town in Rockingham County, New Hampshire, in the United States; not on the city by the same name on the River Exe in England.